All the Wild Hungers. Karen Babine
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All the Wild Hungers
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IT STARTED THIS WAY: in early October, my mother’s doctor asked her if she felt pregnant, if she had bladder issues, digestive problems, clothes not fitting right. My mother’s immediate answer was no—but she went home and thought about where her weight was sitting, what she hadn’t been able to exercise away, the constant constipation, the bloating she chalked up to eating badly while traveling, and she realized she did feel four months pregnant. I tried not to call the tumor her cancer baby, at least not out loud.
My middle sister is currently fourteen weeks pregnant with her third child and the family is ecstatic with joy. Six years ago, when my sister was pregnant with my niece, she sent a text that she and the dog “were taking the Apple for a walk.” We thought it was cute, as we are a small, tightly knit family that likes to think in Proper Nouns, to name things, to put even the most quotidian into its proper context. My sister is pregnant with a Lemon this week, Week 14, and this is amusing. My mother’s uterine tumor, the size of a cabbage, is Week 30, and this is terrifying. Three years ago, my nephew was born at Week 36, but he was the size of that cancerous cabbage. There are patterns emerging here that I do not like.
We learn that my mother’s is a childhood cancer called embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma and they tell us it appears only in children under the age of ten, not in sixty-five-year-old grandmothers, and I keep thinking of embryos, about the physical and emotional dangers of pregnancy, the risks of birth in a country that boasts the largest maternal death rate among developed nations, that women of color are at even more risk from dying as a result of pregnancy and childbirth, and that the risk transcends economic status. Serena Williams’s blood clots were not immediately taken seriously after she gave birth, leading to nearly deadly results; activist Erica Garner suffered a heart attack and passed away three months after giving birth. I keep thinking about what is inside us that never goes away, love and fear, scars that are emotional and physical. The long length of my mother’s abdominal scar is a bright, rich eggplant purple, necessary so the surgeon could deliver her uterus and tumor intact; her own mother’s identical hysterectomy scar had long ago faded to white, an ectopic pregnancy in 1952 that nearly caused her to bleed to death. The